Example sentences of "i [vb mod] [verb] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I look forward to hearing thoughtful and far-reaching speeches such as that made by the hon. Member for Chichester when these matters are discussed at Maastricht , and I hope that views such as his will be reflected in Maastricht — a subject to which I may return in due course .
2 It is , as I may say from repeated experience , a pure and unmixed pleasure to have a goodly volume lying before you , and to know that you … need not open it unless you please …
3 If , as I must assume for present purposes , the plaintiffs have a good cause of action in professional negligence against the third party , then it must be at least possible , if not indeed likely , that the damages recoverable by the plaintiffs from the third party would include damages under at least some of these heads .
4 My Lords , that concludes my analysis of what I perceive to be the important British cases but before seeking to draw conclusions therefrom I must refer to certain Commonwealth and American cases .
5 However insignificant in myself I am the Representative on this question of no mean body in this country who would be … disappointed and chagrined at the suspension of the question — But further — and this is a consideration far more really influential on my Conduct — I can not but feel myself the Representative of a Body who can not speak for themselves and for whom I must act without other guide than my own Conscience .
6 So I if I put that in , I must apologize for misleading the panel .
7 I must say to Conservative Members who are raising points of order of this kind that it is a dangerous game .
8 Erm but er when the war finished , when the war finished and the Home Guard stood down , I ca n't remember who was the mayor of Walsall at the time , but they had a reception in the town hall for the Home Guard and everyone that was in the Home Guard was invited before we hand before we st handed our uniforms in , was invited to attend and I must say with great pride that I was can still remember it now , that the wife and I went to the reception and I was in the uniform and it 'd be the mace bearer I presume that was at the door and he asked your name and er rank and he shouted out your name and rank when you went in and you was greeted by the mayor and mayoress inside the ves the hall of the town hall , and erm I mean er quite proud to be Corporal and Mrs you know and it I mean everyone that went , I mean their rank and name and who was with them , you know , was it was quite quite a er er quite a something of to look back to of interest that was , you know , when we stood down .
9 I must keep in good health , and not die , ’ I replied .
10 One day my mum rang up and said she did n't want me to come home again and that I should go to Social Services because she was sick and tired of all the bother and everything .
11 It was decided I should go to special school and my mother 's objections were mollified by the proof of the academic success that many girls achieved there .
12 I should view with great consternation any attempt to exclude Resident Tutors from any towns or villages …
13 I should mention in particular Associate Warden J. Lampert of TDC , and my faculty colleagues at the Criminal Justice Center .
14 I should like to above anything .
15 Her opening words , which echo a pair of lines in Chaucer 's first fabliau in the sequence of the Canterbury Tales , the Miller 's Tale ( I : 3768 – 9 ) , invite a dialogue charged with sexual connotations , not only in the obvious case of " " ryse " " , but also in the detectable reference to a conventional love-sickness : The monk 's answer immediately confirms the sexual topic of the dialogue , and dispenses with any euphemistic disguises : This rapid movement to a contextually surprising level of familiarity on the topic of sexual intimacy is paralleled in the French fabliau Auburee , where the old bawd , Auburee , in procuring a young wife for a besotted admirer , visits the wife and moves smartly into the bedroom , declaring : ( " I should certainly like to see your bed : then I should know for certain if you lie in the same splendour as the first wife did . " )
16 But I think the way that that would occur would be first of all I would expect to see an increase , a steeper increase than is already project I should say in concealed households .
17 I should apologize for canned soup , but I spent so long talking to Stanley this morning
18 Some people say that once the car is adjusted I should alternate between leaded and unleaded petrol ?
19 ‘ I thought , ’ she said , ignoring her father 's advice to treat him with kid gloves , ‘ not that it 's any business of yours , that I might potter into Nice for the day . ’
20 Small children have strong ideas about what mothers do or do not do ; my own adolescent children are very worried about what I might do in public to embarrass them .
21 So you can guarantee if I get divorced from there down to there I 'll land on fucking and end up back here !
22 could you firm it up a little bit with him you firm it up with I 'll talk to Scottish Homes
23 I 'll change into dry clothes . ’
24 King : I 'll walk on unafraid !
25 The interesting thing of course was his ro , his brother Robert was a civil engineer and the story goes , of course , they disagreed so much that in the end George said okay Robert you can have the civil engineers , I 'll start with mechanical engineers !
26 And as he said it , shifty-eyes-with-dandruff ( and I 'll throw in bad breath ) put out a hand for my arm .
27 I 'll go to blue hang on I 'll just go to blue hang on a minute there do n't go away .
28 I 'll go to Central , see what they say .
29 I 'll know for certain in about an hour .
30 I 'll get into awful trouble , wo n't I ? ’
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